Election
Issue: Transfer of American Jobs Overseas
Washington, Feb. 20 2004 (VOA News) -- The transfer
of American jobs overseas to cut the cost of
doing business has emerged as a key issue in
the battle for the Democratic Party's presidential
nomination between Massachusetts Senator John
Kerry and North Carolina Senator John Edwards.
For David Bevard of Galesburg, Illinois, the
concern over lost jobs is not an abstract issue.
He has worked for 30 years making refrigerators
for the Maytag Corporation and now faces the
prospect of having to look for a new job just
as he was approaching retirement.
"We
have always believed that if you worked hard,
paid your dues, played by the rules and produced
a quality product that you would get rewarded
in the end," he said. "Instead, our
reward is that Maytag is taking the 1,600 jobs
out of Galesburg [Illinois] and moving them
to Reynosa, Mexico, and South Korea. This is
going to be devastating to our community of
34,000 people and, quite frankly, we are not
alone."
Mr. Bevard spoke at a rally this week sponsored
by the AFL-CIO, the country's largest federation
of labor unions, representing more than 13 million
workers. The union organization now backs Senator
John Kerry for the Democratic Party's presidential
nomination.
The
concern over lost jobs has become a driving
issue in the Democratic race and may have helped
Senator John Edwards to a stronger than expected
second place finish in Tuesday's Wisconsin primary.
Senator
Edwards says he has been less supportive of
free trade deals than his rival, Senator Kerry,
and he now focuses on the job loss issue in
his campaign speeches.
"We have shipped more than a million good
jobs overseas in a race for cheaper labor,"
said John Edwards. "I don't know if you
heard this, but the administration - the White
House - said about two weeks ago that the outsourcing
of American jobs is a good thing. What planet
do these people live on? Let me tell you what
would be a good thing is to outsource this administration!"
For
his part, Senator Kerry is now critical of free
trade agreements and says future agreements
should include tougher job and environmental
protections.
The
job loss issue has become a potential weakness
for President Bush as he gears up his re-election
campaign. The president's difficulties on the
issue were compounded recently when the chairman
of the president's Council of Economic Advisers,
Gregory Mankiw, said the outsourcing or transfer
of U.S. jobs overseas was a good thing for the
U.S. economy.
Jack
Pitney is a political scientist at Claremont-McKenna
College in Los Angeles. He says the comment
amounted to a political stumble for the White
House.
"Well, from the standpoint of strict economics
you could make that case," he said. "But
politically, that was a terribly damaging statement
to make and naturally the Democrats are taking
advantage of it."
Democrats
are seizing on the issue, charging the president
is responsible for the loss of 2.7 million jobs
since he took office in 2001.
But
the president is fighting back, arguing that
his massive tax cut plan will help U.S. businesses
create new jobs.
"And
if you are interested in job creation, why not
focus on the job creators? So the tax relief
was passed not only to help individuals but
to help our small business sector," said
President Bush.
The
job loss issue is one reason the president's
approval ratings may be dropping in public opinion
polls. A recent survey by USA Today, the Cable
News Network and the Gallup Poll found that
if the election were held today, the president
would lose by a double-digit margin to either
Senator Kerry or Senator Edwards.
But
the chairman of the president's re-election
campaign, former Montana Governor Marc Racicot,
says that poll also showed that most Americans
regard President Bush as a strong leader.
"But
if you take a look at the same polls, you find
very, very favorable ratings for the president
on his capacity to lead and about him caring
about the American people," he said.
Voters
in the Democratic primaries and caucuses have
consistently ranked jobs and the economy as
one of their top concerns, and most political
experts predict it will be a crucial issue in
the November election.
William
Schneider is an analyst at the American Enterprise
Institute here in Washington.
"The
biggest single issue that the voters have put
on this agenda this year is not the Iraq War,"
said William Schneider. "[Former Vermont
Governor Howard] Dean tried to make an issue
out of the Iraq War. It didn't work even among
Democrats. It couldn't divide the Democratic
Party. But the jobs issue is central and that
is, of course, one of the key factors in Bush's
problems, not simply Iraq but primarily the
fact that somewhere over two million jobs have
been lost."
But
many experts also predict that American voters
will be just as concerned with national security
in the wake of the 2001 terrorist attacks, an
issue which many of them believe favors President
Bush.
--
Jim Malone
- Voice of America in Washington
-- Reprinted with
the permission of Voice of America
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